C
collier23
Re: T4TS, Starting my practical tomorrow
sounds like prices have went up lol
sounds like prices have went up lol
Thank you for the advice bernie, cracking post🙂Hmm!
I'm an old guy just nosing around! When I was an apprentice Plumber we got £1.15p for a 45 hour week. Working Saturday morning was part of your normal week.
In those days it was all "Don't matter how long you take, just do a good job!".
It changed in the eighties to "When will you be finished?" "That job is taking a long time!" "Its costing a fortune!"
Today probably by an employer you will be told "Your next job is!" and you haven't even started the first one you had.
The customer will usually say "How much?" "How long will it take?" and "Will you be long?" regardless of whether your re washering a tap or plumbing the whole house out.
So get accustomed to it boys its part of the job.
As to the work?
Well new house work on a building site is probably one of the easiest in a way.
You are usually given a set of drawings to follow with everything worked out for you. The thing is you have to keep to the exact measurements for everything, to make all the houses look the same. That can be a bit of a pain when you first start.
Then the next thing on site work is speed!
Its usually bonus work and you have got to be fast. The slowest gets the sack first. But your work has also got to look good. Don't forget the customer probably may not know the technical difference between a good and a bad job, but they can tell one which is symmetrical and pleasing to the eye. Load your end feeds out, with solder runs everywhere and dirty great oxidised over heat marks and you'll get few points even if your job is technically brilliant. And no doing foreigners, by selling all the charcoal where your torch has been burning half the floor away. And flush your systems, no saying 3 months later "These combi's are always going wrong!" when you haven't followed the correct flushing procedures.
No putting millions of elbows on your CH runs, requiring a super booster pump to push the water around.
Oh! and yes! Never say your not sure to the customer. Just say "I'll let you know!" or "I'll do some tests!" and then go and look it up or test it.
If you say your not sure, they can loose confidence in you. A bit like a doctor saying to you "I am not sure what is wrong with you!"
So give them, reasonable cost, beauty and technical excellence all done very fast and neat and you will be the sort of plumber people will call back and give another job too.
😀😀😀😀😀😀
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